"Mr. Frezza's post was removed from Forbes.com almost immediately after he published it," Forbes spokesperson Mia Carbonell told the Daily News. "Mr. Frezza is no longer a contributor to Forbes.com."

In an email, Frezza said Forbes rightly pulled the piece because its subject didn't fit the site's politics section and that the accompanying photo "was in poor taste."

"That being said I stand by every word I wrote," Frezza said.

"Most people have no idea what is going on on college campuses these days due to the ill-advised raising of the drinking age from 18 to 21, forcing so much of it to go underground," Frezza said.

"I have complete confidence that the men at the fraternity I mentor will always comport themselves properly. Any woman on campus knows that she is safe in our house, which is perhaps why some choose to behave with such reckless abandon," he said.

"You have no idea what a predicament this has put our colleges and well behaved fraternities in," he said.

"Unless and until we begin holding individuals accountable for their own behavior, and not institutions, my headline says it all."

Frezza also said he was glad the piece "kicked off a national conversation on the subject."

Frezza, the school's Chi Phi fraternity alumni president, opened the piece by acknowledging its provocative "click-bait" headline before going on to defend it against "feminist web vigilantes."

Drunk women were threats to frats, he argued, because chapter regs don't include rules on how to deal with them.

Writer Bill Frezza said the piece was pulled because it didn't fit the politics section and the photo 'was in poor taste.' (Forbes.com)

"We take the rules very seriously, so much so that brothers who flout these policies can, and will, be asked to move out," Frezza wrote.

"But we have very little control over women who walk in the door carrying enough pre-gaming booze in their bellies to render them unconscious before the night is through."

Later, he argued, "In our age of sexual equality, why drunk female students are almost never characterized as irresponsible jerks is a question I leave to the feminists."

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"But it is precisely those irresponsible women that the brothers must be trained to identify and protect against, because all it takes is one to bring an entire fraternity system down."

In another passage, Frezza advised young frat bros, "Never, ever take a drunk female guest to your bedroom — even if you have a signed contract indicating sexual consent."

"Based on new standards being promulgated on campus, all consent is null and void the minute a woman becomes intoxicated — even if she is your fiancée," he wrote.

"And while a rape charge under these circumstances is unlikely to hold up in a court of law, it doesn't take much for a campus kangaroo court to get you expelled, ruining your life while saddling your fraternity with a reputation for harboring rapists," he said.

A stock photo that ran with a column showed a buxom redhead lying face down on the ground while guzzling from a half-empty wine bottle.